Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2018 12:07 AM
    LONGUEUIL, Que. — A provincial police officer who crashed into a car at high speed and killed a 5-year-old boy during a surveillance operation will likely be sentenced to jail time.
     
     
    The Crown and the defence submitted a joint proposal to the court on Monday in Longueuil, Que. recommending that Patrick Ouellet receive an eight-month sentence.
     
     
    Quebec court Judge Eric Simard is expected to render his decision at the end of November.
     
     
    Ouellet was convicted in July of dangerous driving causing the 2014 death of Nicolas Thorne-Belance.
     
     
    The maximum sentence for the offence is 14 years in prison.
     
     
    The police officer addressed the court, expressing his sympathy to family members of Nicolas, who were in the courtroom.
     
     
    Ouellet's trial heard he was travelling at more than 120 km/h in a 50 km/h zone when he hit the vehicle carrying the boy in a suburb just south of Montreal.
     
     
    The youngster died a few days later in hospital.
     
     
    "We have taken into consideration all the jurisprudence, in particular the sentences handed down to police officers who have come before the court in circumstances similar to those in this case," prosecutor Genevieve Langlois said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadians Fear For Relatives Trapped Amid Flooding In Indian State Of Kerala

    Canadians Fear For Relatives Trapped Amid Flooding In Indian State Of Kerala
    More than 300 people have died this week in the wake of the flooding, officials said, and more than 800,000 have been displaced by the floods and landslides that are a result of heavy rains that began on Aug. 8.

    Canadians Fear For Relatives Trapped Amid Flooding In Indian State Of Kerala

    Maxime Bernier Diatribe Against 'Extreme Multiculturalism' Boosts Liberal Coffers

    Maxime Bernier Diatribe Against 'Extreme Multiculturalism' Boosts Liberal Coffers
    Maxime Bernier may be causing headaches for his fellow Conservative MPs, but his latest musings on "extreme multiculturalism" have been a boon for the federal Liberal party.

    Maxime Bernier Diatribe Against 'Extreme Multiculturalism' Boosts Liberal Coffers

    Justin Trudeau: No Apologies For Heckler Encounter, Pledges To Call Out 'Hate Speech'

    Trudeau made the comments when asked whether he went too far in accusing a Quebec woman of racism and intolerance as she heckled him last week during a rally in Quebec.

    Justin Trudeau: No Apologies For Heckler Encounter, Pledges To Call Out 'Hate Speech'

    Electric Vehicle Sales Growing, But Supply, Lack Of Knowledge Remain Barriers

    Electric Vehicle Sales Growing, But Supply, Lack Of Knowledge Remain Barriers
    A new survey of car sales representatives suggests cost and supply are the two main barriers that are keeping Canadians from buying more electric vehicles.

    Electric Vehicle Sales Growing, But Supply, Lack Of Knowledge Remain Barriers

    Justin Trudeau Formally Announces He'll Run Again In Next Year's Election

    Justin Trudeau Formally Announces He'll Run Again In Next Year's Election
    Justin Trudeau Will Run Again In The 2019 Federal Election.

    Justin Trudeau Formally Announces He'll Run Again In Next Year's Election

    Lottery For Parent Sponsorship To Be Replaced, More Applications To Be Accepted

    Lottery For Parent Sponsorship To Be Replaced, More Applications To Be Accepted
    The Trudeau government is scrapping an unpopular lottery system for immigrants looking to reunite with their parents and grandparents and is increasing the number of sponsorship applications it will accept next year.

    Lottery For Parent Sponsorship To Be Replaced, More Applications To Be Accepted